However, the predicted bloom is expected to be smaller than last year’s intense bloom, and considerably less than the record-setting 2011 bloom.

Bloom impacts will vary across the lake’s western basin and are classified by an estimate of both its concentration and how far it spreads.

Harmful algal blooms (HABs) were common in western Lake Erie between the 1960s and 1980s. After a lapse of nearly 20 years, blooms have been steadily increasing over the past decade.

Annual outlook

Since 2008, NOAA has issued weekly HAB bulletins for western Lake Erie through the National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science (NCCOS) to give warnings of bloom development. Also, this marks the third time NOAA has issued an annual outlook for western Lake Erie. ￼ “The reemergence of harmful algal blooms in Lake Erie is an ecological and economic setback for communities along the coast,” U.S. Representative Marcy Kaptur said.

“NOAA, Ohio Sea Grant, OSU, Heidelberg University and University of Toledo are developing tools to predict and target phosphorus, which will help in the fight to restore balance to Lake Erie’s ecosystem, Ohio’s greatest natural resource,” she continued.

Informed decisions

The Lake Erie harmful algal bloom forecast, combined with NOAA’s weekly HAB Bulletins, underscores the importance of having accessible and reliable environmental intelligence so the public and environmental health specialists can make informed decisions, said Holly Bamford, assistant NOAA administrator for the National Ocean Service.

“This NOAA model, resulting from a great collaboration, has been incredibly valuable to us as we work to eliminate blooms to protect human health, the Lake Erie ecosystem and its coastal economy,” said Jeff Reutter, Ph.D., director of Ohio State University’s Sea Grant program and Stone Laboratory.

In Ohio, as part of the Ohio Phosphorus Task Force II, scientists have used information from the NOAA model to help them target reductions in the amount of phosphorus going into the lake that should help to greatly reduce or eliminate the HABs.

The 2014 seasonal forecast used models developed by NCCOS scientists, the coastal science office for NOAA’s National Ocean Service.

The forecast uses a 12-year Lake Erie nutrient flow data set, collected by Heidelberg University’s National Center for Water Quality Research, and analysis of satellite data from the European Space Agency’s ENVISAT and NASA’s Terra and Aqua satellites. ￼ Separately, a jointly funded University of Michigan Water Center and NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (GLERL) independent HAB experimental model concurs with the 2014 forecast.

In addition to the satellite monitoring, GLERL, Ohio State University’s Sea Grant program and Stone Laboratory, Heidelberg University, the University of Toledo, and Ohio EPA will be collecting key measurements from the lake as the summer progresses.

Those results will provide valuable information to regional managers and assist NCCOS scientists in further refining the accuracy of this forecast’s models.

“Issuing and evaluating these seasonal forecasts improves our understanding of how the blooms form, which leads to strategies to reduce their impacts,” said Richard Stumpf, Ph.D., NOAA’s ecological forecasting applied research lead at NCCOS.

NOAA forecasting

The Lake Erie forecast is part of a NOAA ecological forecasting initiative that aims to deliver accurate, relevant, timely, ecological forecasts and important environmental data directly to coastal resource managers and the public as part of its stewardship and scientific mandates for coastal, marine and Great Lakes resources.

Weekly updates of bloom location and severity can be received by a subscription to the NOAA Lake Erie HAB Bulletin.

Additionally, NOAA currently provides, or is developing, HABs and hypoxia forecasts for the Gulf of Maine, Chesapeake Bay, the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific Northwest. Funding to support the Lake Erie forecasts was provided through NCCOS, NOAA’s Center of Excellence for Great Lakes and Human Health, and NASA’s Applied Science Health and Air Quality Program.

The research programs supporting this work are authorized under the Harmful Algal Bloom and Hypoxia Research and Control Act, known as HABHRCA, which was amended and reauthorized by Congress in June through 2018.

1 COMMENT

There is one key fact missing in this article that was mentioned several times in the webinar that the article was taken from. The increase in HABs has been exacerbated by climate change. This is from a significant increase in the number of large storm events (generally considered to be more than 1 inch of rainfall in a 24 hour period) which results in larger amounts of phosphorus runoff into waterways; and increased water temperatures, which contributes to the blooms forming.